Jack Rusell Puppies

persimmoncf

Persimmon Creek Farm
The breed is fine!!! What are you going to do breed them to fly? Rescue yorkies, don't make more.
WOW, Just this morning I rescued one of my yorkies...she thought she could fly and almost fell off the edge of a steep cliff. I told her not to listen to Geek anymore:killingme
 

Geek

New Member
Percy had an answer for you Cgirl...
You know it's not the message that get people defensive...it's how the messenger delivers it!!:howdy:

Are you not grown adults? You can't hear tough words about the actions you take?


Say I made pancakes for my family. 4 people and I made 18 pancakes. They eat, they are full, but I keep making pancakes. I know most will go in the garbage, but I want to make the perfect pancake, So I will keep making more. And check this out, now my pancakes are making more pancakes, that will go in the garbage too. But I will keep making pancakes, even with all the garbages full, more pancakes.


Now pretend my pancakes are dogs.
 
It has been my observation that most of the horsey people who post on this board breed one or more breeds of dogs. They also tend to have more than just horses and dogs on their land.

From what I've gathered over the years from reading different threads, they tend to support their habit (horses and such) by turning their habit into a business so that parts of it can be tax deductible and so that they can use what they love doing to provide an income which in turn gets put back into the farm.

I'm thinking it's the norm for folks who spend the better part of each and every day tending to animals to breed and sell. I see it more as a choice of livelyhood rather than someone who sits back on their couch eating bonbons paid for by money made off their breeding biatches.

I know there are people who abuse their animals and have trailers or cages full of 'em for the sole purpose of producing offspring, but I don't believe all people can be generalized into this category.

I also understand Geek's point. For every new litter brought into this world and placed in homes, those are no longer homes that have room for the animals who are already here and face death simply because they have no one who will take them in.

Those against any purposeful breeding don't understand how those who breed can do so with clear conscious.

Those who enjoy their animals and see the breeding process as a normal part of raising animals do not understand why some others consider them to be animal abusers.

The two groups will never understand each other and this conflict will never be resolved.
 
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somdprincess

The one and only Princess
Are you not grown adults? You can't hear tough words about the actions you take?


Say I made pancakes for my family. 4 people and I made 18 pancakes. They eat, they are full, but I keep making pancakes. I know most will go in the garbage, but I want to make the perfect pancake, So I will keep making more. And check this out, now my pancakes are making more pancakes, that will go in the garbage too. But I will keep making pancakes, even with all the garbages full, more pancakes.


Now pretend my pancakes are dogs.



now I am hungry
 

persimmoncf

Persimmon Creek Farm
I was asking the author of the thread. The one freaking out.


But Percy, since you're the only one who answered, how do you improve the breed?
Apparently you havent met my yorkies yet. If you did lay your eyes upon them then you would know...............
 

somdprincess

The one and only Princess
It has been my observation that most of the horsey people who post on this board breed one or more breeds of dogs. They also tend to have more than just horses and dogs on their land.

From what I've gathered over the years from reading different threads, they tend to support their habit (horses and such) by turning their habit into a business so that parts of it can be tax deductible and so that they can use what they love doing to provide an income which in turn gets put back into the farm.

I'm thinking it's the norm for folks who spend the better part of each and every day tending to animals to breed and sell. I see it more as a choice of livelyhood rather than someone who sits back on their couch eating bonbons paid for by money made off their breeding biatches.

I know there are people who abuse their animals and have trailers or cages full of 'em for the sole purpose of producing offspring, but I don't believe all people can be generalized into this category.

I also understand Geek's point. For every new litter brought into this world and placed in homes, those are no longer homes that have room for the animals who are already here and face death simply because they have no one who will take them in.

Those against any purposeful breeding don't understand how those who breed can do so with clear conscious.

Those who enjoy their animals and see the breeding process as a normal part of raising animals do not understand why some others consider them to be animal abusers.

The two groups will never understand each other and this conflict will never be resolved.

good post
 
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